About this book

The Great Divergence brings new insight to one of the classic questions of history: Why did sustained industrial growth begin in Northwest Europe, despite surprising similarities between advanced areas of Europe and East Asia? As Ken Pomeranz shows, as recently as 1750, parallels between these two parts of the world were very high in life expectancy, consumption, product and factor markets, and the strategies of households. Perhaps most surprisingly, Pomeranz demonstrates that the Chinese and Japanese cores were no worse off ecologically than Western Europe. Core areas throughout the eighteenth-century Old World faced comparable local shortages of land-intensive products, shortages that were only partly resolved by trade.

Pomeranz argues that Europe's nineteenth-century divergence from the Old World owes much to the fortunate location of coal, which substituted for timber. This made Europe's failure to use its land intensively much less of a problem, while allowing growth in energy-intensive industries. Another crucial difference that he notes has to do with trade. Fortuitous global conjunctures made the Americas a greater source of needed primary products for Europe than any Asian periphery. This allowed Northwest Europe to grow dramatically in population, specialize further in manufactures, and remove labor from the land, using increased imports rather than maximizing yields. Together, coal and the New World allowed Europe to grow along resource-intensive, labor-saving paths.

Meanwhile, Asia hit a cul-de-sac. Although the East Asian hinterlands boomed after 1750, both in population and in manufacturing, this growth prevented these peripheral regions from exporting vital resources to the cloth-producing Yangzi Delta. As a result, growth in the core of East Asia's economy essentially stopped, and what growth did exist was forced along labor-intensive, resource-saving paths – paths Europe could have been forced down, too, had it not been for favorable resource stocks from underground and overseas.

"The vast international disparity in incomes and standards of living between Western Europe and its offshoots on the one hand, and most of Asia, Africa, and Latin America on the other, is a striking feature of the modern world. Pomeranz's study is an important addition to the literature that challenges elements of every major interpretation of the European take-off."– Choice

"A profoundly though-provoking book which will change the terms of the debate about the origins of capitalism, the rise of the West and the fall of the East."– Jack Goody, Times Higher Education Supplement

"This book makes, bar none, the biggest and most important contribution to our new understanding of the causes and mechanisms that brought about the great divergence' between the West and the rest of China in particular [...] An entirely new and refreshing departure. Although he makes new comparisons between Europe, China, Japan, India, Southeast Asia, Pomeranz also connects all these and more in a bold new sweep that should immediately make all previous and most contemporary related work obsolescent."– Andre Gunde Frank, Journal of Asian Studies

"This book is very important and will have to be taken seriously by anyone who thinks that explaining the Industrial Revolution [...] is crucial to our understanding of the modern world [...] [A] book so rich that fresh insights emerge from virtually every page."– Robert B. Marks, American Historical Review

"Exhaustively researched and brilliantly argued [...] Suffice it to say that The Great Divergence is undoubtedly one of the most sophisticated and significant pieces of cliometric scholarship to be published of late, especially in the field of world history."– Edward R. Slack, Jr., Journal of World History

"Pomeranz uses that European invention – economics – to overturn Eurocentrism, establishing beyond cavil a New Fact in our world. Never again will Europeans imagine they stood alone in the doorway of economic growth. Pomeranz and his colleagues in the new sinology have reintroduced the Central Kingdom and its stunning historical sources, and Pomeranz has written the one essential book."– Deirdre McClosky, University of Iowa

"Pomeranz uses a mixture of institutional forces and technological/geological luck to explain how an economic and ecological 'tie game' suddenly became a victory for western Europe over China. He combines global imagination with the scientific detail needed to make his points hold firm. The Great Divergence should command widespread respect."– Peter H. Lindert, University of California, Davis

"A truly magisterial effort based on an immense knowledge of the field, a vast amount of reading, and on close and careful analysis, informed by both social science and history."– Joel Mokyr, Northwestern University

"This is an outstanding book, painstaking and devastating in its attack on received wisdom, supported by a wealth of solid evidence and elegant argument."– Jack A. Goldstone, University of California, Davis

Contents

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ixINTRODUCTION Comparisons, Connections, and Narratives of European Economic Development 3Variations on the Eurppe-Centered Story: Demography. Ecology, and Accumulation 10Other Europe-Centered Stories: Markets, Firms, and Institutions 14Problems with the Europe-Centered Stories 16Building a More Inclusive Story 17Comparisons, Connections, and the Structure of the Argument 24A Note on Geographic Coverage 25

PART ONE: A WORLD OF SURPRISING RESEMBLANCES 29ONE Europe before Asia? Population, Capital Accumulation, and Technology in Explanations of European Development 31Agriculture, Transport, and Livestock Capital 32Living Longer? Living Better? 36Birthrates 40Accumulation? 42What about Technology? 43

TWO Market Economies in Europe and Asia 69Land Markets and Restrictions on Land Use in China and Western Europe 70Labor Systems 80Migration, Markets, and Institutions 82Markets for Farm Products 86Rural Industry and Sideline Activities 86Family Labor in China and Europe: "Involution" and the "Industrious Revolution" 91Conclusion to Part 1: Multiple Cores and Shared Constraints in the Early Modem World Economy 107

PART TWO: FROM NEW ETHOS TO NEW ECONOMY? CONSUMPTION, INVESTMENT, AND CAPITALISM 109INTRODUCTION 111THREE Luxury Consumption and the Rise of Capitalism 114More and Less Ordinary Luxuries 114Everyday Luxuries and Popular Consumption in Early Modem Europe and Asia 116Consumer Durables and the "Objectification of Luxury 127Exotic Goods and the Velocity of Fashion: Global Conjuncture and the Appearance of Culturally Based Economic Difference 152Luxury Demand, Social Systems, and Capitalist Firms 162Visible Hands: Firm Structure, Sociopolitical Structure and "Capitalism" in Europe and Asia 166Overseas Extraction and Capital Accumulation: The Williams Thesis Revisited 186The Importance of the Obvious: Luxury Demand, Capitalism, and New World Colonization 189Interstate Competition, Violence, and State Systems: How They Didn't Matter and How They Did 194Conclusion to Part 2: The Significance of Similarities and of Differences 206

PART THREE: BEYOND SMITH AND MALTHUS: FROM ECOLOGICAL CONSTRAINTS TO SUSTAINED INDUSTRIAL GROWTH 209FIVE Shared Constraints: Ecological Strain in Western Europe and East Asia 211Deforestation and Soil Depletion in China: Some Comparisons with Europe 225Trading for Resources with Old World Peripheries: Common Patterns and Limits of Smithian Solutions to Quasi-Malthusian Problems 242

SIX Abolishing the Land Constraint: The Americas as a New Kind of Periphery 264Another New World, Another Windfall: Precious Metals 269Some Measurements of Ecological Relief: Britain in the Age of the Industrial Revolution 274Comparisons and Calculations: What Do the Numbers Mean? 279Beyond and Besides the Numbers 281Into an Industrial World 283Last Comparisons: Labor Intensity, Resources, and Industrial "Growing Up" 285

Appendix A Comparative Estimates of Land Transport Capacity per Person: Germany and North India, circa 1800 301Appendix B Estimates of Manure Applied to North China and European Farms in the Late Eighteenth Century, and a Comparison of Resulting Nitrogen Fluxes 303Appendix C Forest Cover and Fuel-Supply Estimates for France, Lingnan, and a Portion of North China, 1700-1850 307Appendix D Estimates of "Ghost Acreage" Provided by Various Imports to Late Eighteenth- and Early Nineteenth-Century Britain 313Appendix E Estimates of Earning Power of Rural Textile Workers in the Lower Yangzi Region of China, 1750-1840 316Appendix F Estimates of Cotton and Silk Production, Lower Yangzi and China as a Whole, 1750 and Later--With Comparisons to United Kingdom, France, and Germany 327

BIBLIOGRAPHY 339INDEX 373

Write a review

There are currently no reviews for this product. Be the first to review this product!